P. Suwitchayanon, K. Kunasakdakul, H. Kato‐Noguchi
{"title":"Screening the Allelopathic Activity of 14 Medicinal Plants from Northern Thailand","authors":"P. Suwitchayanon, K. Kunasakdakul, H. Kato‐Noguchi","doi":"10.2525/ECB.55.143","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Allelopathy is a phenomenon of chemical interactions among plants, and allelochemicals are chemicals released from one plant into the environment via volatilization, root exudation, leachates, and plant decomposition. The allelochemicals influence the germination and growth of neighboring plants in either an inhibitory or stimulatory manner (Rice, 1984). In recent years, allelochemicals have been studied and tested as bioherbicides for weed control. Medicinal plants have been widely studied in the search for potential natural active compounds (Batish et al., 2007; Gilani et al., 2010). The allelopathic activity of 239 medicinal plants was evaluated and 223 were found to have allelopathic activities (Fujii et al., 2003). The allelopathic activity of numerous medicinal plants has also been reported (Syed et al., 2014; Synowiec and Nowicka-Po e , 2016). Thailand is located in Southeast Asia and has a tropical climate, resulting in a wide diversity of plant species. About 80% of at least 10,000 forest tree and herbal plant species in Thailand are recognized for their medicinal properties (Thitiprasert et al., 2007). Many of the species dominate and form colonies with few or no other plant species around them. Their strong ability to garner natural resources such as nutrients and water may allow them to establish colonies. Their allelopathic ability may also be involved in establishing colonies. The selected 14 Thai medicinal plants in this study are common plants in northern Thailand and grow as colonies in nature. All of them have important medicinal properties, but rarely study in allelopathic activity. The present study, therefore, aimed to evaluate the allelopathic activity of 14 Thai medicinal plants on the seedling growth of lettuce for the purpose of developing natural herbicides in the future.","PeriodicalId":11762,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Control in Biology","volume":"9 1","pages":"143-145"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"8","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Control in Biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2525/ECB.55.143","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 8
Abstract
Allelopathy is a phenomenon of chemical interactions among plants, and allelochemicals are chemicals released from one plant into the environment via volatilization, root exudation, leachates, and plant decomposition. The allelochemicals influence the germination and growth of neighboring plants in either an inhibitory or stimulatory manner (Rice, 1984). In recent years, allelochemicals have been studied and tested as bioherbicides for weed control. Medicinal plants have been widely studied in the search for potential natural active compounds (Batish et al., 2007; Gilani et al., 2010). The allelopathic activity of 239 medicinal plants was evaluated and 223 were found to have allelopathic activities (Fujii et al., 2003). The allelopathic activity of numerous medicinal plants has also been reported (Syed et al., 2014; Synowiec and Nowicka-Po e , 2016). Thailand is located in Southeast Asia and has a tropical climate, resulting in a wide diversity of plant species. About 80% of at least 10,000 forest tree and herbal plant species in Thailand are recognized for their medicinal properties (Thitiprasert et al., 2007). Many of the species dominate and form colonies with few or no other plant species around them. Their strong ability to garner natural resources such as nutrients and water may allow them to establish colonies. Their allelopathic ability may also be involved in establishing colonies. The selected 14 Thai medicinal plants in this study are common plants in northern Thailand and grow as colonies in nature. All of them have important medicinal properties, but rarely study in allelopathic activity. The present study, therefore, aimed to evaluate the allelopathic activity of 14 Thai medicinal plants on the seedling growth of lettuce for the purpose of developing natural herbicides in the future.
化感作用是植物间化学相互作用的一种现象,化感物质是指植物通过挥发、根渗出、渗滤液和植物分解释放到环境中的化学物质。化感物质以抑制或刺激的方式影响邻近植物的发芽和生长(Rice, 1984)。近年来,人们对化感化学物质作为生物除草剂进行了研究和试验。药用植物已被广泛研究以寻找潜在的天然活性化合物(Batish et al., 2007;Gilani et al., 2010)。对239种药用植物进行了化感作用评价,发现223种具有化感作用(Fujii et al., 2003)。许多药用植物的化感作用也有报道(Syed et al., 2014;Synowiec and Nowicka-Po e, 2016)。泰国位于东南亚,属热带气候,植物种类繁多。在泰国,至少10,000种森林树木和草本植物中约有80%被认为具有药用价值(Thitiprasert et al., 2007)。许多物种占据主导地位,并形成殖民地,周围很少或没有其他植物物种。它们获取自然资源(如养分和水)的能力很强,这可能使它们能够建立殖民地。它们的化感作用能力也可能与建立殖民地有关。本研究选取的14种泰国药用植物是泰国北部常见的植物,在自然界中以群体形式生长。它们都具有重要的药用价值,但在化感作用方面的研究很少。因此,本研究旨在评价14种泰国药用植物对生菜幼苗生长的化感作用,为今后开发天然除草剂提供依据。